New Orleans Women and the Poydras Home

New Orleans Women and the Poydras Home - Cover

More Durable than Marble

by Pamela Tyler

240 pages / 6.00 x 9.00 inches / 16 halftones, 1 map

ebook available

Medicine / History of Medicine | Social Studies / Women's Studies | Social Studies / Regional Studies | Women's Studies

Hardcover / 9780807163221 / April 2016
A two-hundred-year-old institution, the Poydras Home—originally the Poydras Asylum—stands as an exemplar of woman-led charitable organizations. In a thorough and engaging narrative, Pamela Tyler offers the first complete history of this remarkable New Orleans establishment from its founding as an orphanage for young girls to its present-day operation as a retirement community and assisted-living facility. Throughout, Tyler paints a vivid picture of the many women who faced down the challenges of war, disease, natural disaster, social unrest, and restrictive gender ideals to realize the mission of the Poydras Home.
 
Drawing on previously unreleased archival material, Tyler documents how the institution’s benefactor, Julien Poydras, used his immense wealth to support a haven for impoverished girls, and how the dedicated women of the Poydras board pursued that ambition through more than just residential services. Tyler reveals that the majority of the Poydras “orphans” had one living parent, and it was dire poverty and a dearth of social services in New Orleans that drove single parents, usually mothers, to place their daughters in the asylum. Further research demonstrates that the Poydras went beyond simply providing a shelter for the children of distressed parents; volunteer managers worked to shape their charges’ character through an emphasis on morals, education, and the fundamentals of housewifery. 
 
Following the institution from its antebellum origins to Reconstruction, through the Progressive era, and into the obsolescence of children’s homes in the mid-twentieth century, Tyler highlights the impacts of both national affairs and daily life on the charity. This rich history winds through the last fifty years as the Poydras Home boldly and successfully changed its mission to provide care for elderly men and women. 
 
The result of years of research, New Orleans Women and the Poydras Home is a sweeping social history that recognizes the determination of women caregivers and the thousands of lives they benefited.
1. Orphans and Orphanages: A Historical Overview
2. The Genesis of an Idea
3. Humble Beginnings and a Generous Benefactor
4. Years of Growth
5. Crosses to Bear: The Impact of Religious Strife on the Poydras Asylum
6. Challenges to Poydras: The Union Army and Reconstruction
7. In Sickness and in Health: The Operation of the Poydras Asylum in Its First Hundred Years
8. Farewell to the Old Poydras
9. And Welcome to the New!

Pamela Tyler is associate professor of history at the University of Southern Mississippi and author of Silk Stockings and Ballot Boxes: Women and Politics in New Orleans, 1920–1963.

Praise for New Orleans Women and Poydras Home

“Few scholars have examined the benevolent efforts of Protestant women in [New Orleans]. Pamela Tyler’s book, New Orleans Women and Poydras Home, is a welcomed volume that seeks to fill the gap in the historiography. . . . As an institutional history of one of New Orleans most enduring institutions, Pamela Tyler offers an important narrative of Protestant women’s leadership and charity work in the South.”—Civil War History

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